I bought a box of filters at an antique fair yesterday. The seller thought there were perhaps something to do with an optician, but I'm fairly sure they were used for photographic purposes. He thought they are late Victorian, but that's pure guesswork.
There are 13 in the box, with slots for 3 more, presumably missing.
They are made of thick glass, 1.5" square, with a coloured sheet of gelatin or similar material sandwiched between.
Some have a number etched into the top corner, and some have an additional L etched into the top left corner, and some have no markings at all. The colours range from deep cobalt blue, to a deep maroon, with rich oranges and greens along the way, but no yellow.
A puzzling feature of them is that they are all rather dark, with an exposure compensation of around 25X. This seems a very suspiciously high filter factor for Victorian / Edwardian photography!
If anyone has any ideas about what they are or how they would have been used, I'd love to hear!
The images are here on my blog. Thanks, Iain
https://fouragesofsand.blogspot.com/2021/11/puzzling-antique-glass-filters.html
There are 13 in the box, with slots for 3 more, presumably missing.
They are made of thick glass, 1.5" square, with a coloured sheet of gelatin or similar material sandwiched between.
Some have a number etched into the top corner, and some have an additional L etched into the top left corner, and some have no markings at all. The colours range from deep cobalt blue, to a deep maroon, with rich oranges and greens along the way, but no yellow.
A puzzling feature of them is that they are all rather dark, with an exposure compensation of around 25X. This seems a very suspiciously high filter factor for Victorian / Edwardian photography!
If anyone has any ideas about what they are or how they would have been used, I'd love to hear!
The images are here on my blog. Thanks, Iain
https://fouragesofsand.blogspot.com/2021/11/puzzling-antique-glass-filters.html